Microtrotters

Adrien Delmas

IT ARCHITECT

Sécurité

Marketplacees Solutions. Decentralized Autonomous Organization. A Decentralized Autonomous Organization (often abbreviated "DAO"; sometimes referred to as a Fully Automated Business Entity or Distributed Autonomous Corporation/Distributed Autonomous Company, often abbreviated "FAB" or "DAC") is a decentralized network of narrow-AI autonomous agents which perform an output-maximizing production function and which divides its labor into computationally intractable tasks (which it incentivizes humans to do) and tasks which it performs itself.[1][2] It can be thought of as a corporation run without any human involvement under the control of an incorruptible set of business rules.

These rules are typically implemented as publicly auditable open-source software distributed across the computers of their stakeholders. A human becomes a stakeholder by buying stock in the company or being paid in that stock to provide services for the company. Terminology[edit] Autonomous Agents[edit] Decentralized Applications (DAs)[edit] Criticism of terminology[edit] Demand.

Thing is, we really can’t let people attach ginormous 2-meg files and then send out to 50,000 people on their list. It’s not an optimal experience for the recipient (let alone the ISPs out there) and the bandwidth costs would be ridiculous. We used to tell people to take their file and upload it to their own web server, then come back to MailChimp and link to that file. But now we have a way to do all that from inside MailChimp… Here’s how it works. Let’s say I’m working on an email and I want to place a link to a white paper. First, just highlight the text: BTW: I personally think it’s good netiquette to indicate the size and type of the file they’re about to download. After highlighting the text, click the "insert link" button in MailChimp: then select the "upload" tab: and upload the file from your computer. you’ll see your uploaded files here:
L'actu à retenir : évènements, politique, société...

Graphisme

Turning a Photograph into a Polka Dot Image in GIMP. This a very quick simple tutorial and a bit of fun!

I have made a range of different sizes – 50px, 75px, 100px, 150px patterns so you can easily apply the effect in seconds. I suggest you try some masking of layers as well to experiment with design :). Polka Dot Photograph 1. Making a Polka Dot Stencil Create a new document in GIMP – choose the size of your Polka Dot (I have ready made ones to download at the end of the tutorial), Fill with: Transparency, 72 resolution should be fine: Making a Polka Dot Stencil Grab the Ellipse Tool, fill the square with the a circle:Invert the selection, Ctrl + I or Select –> Invert:Grab the Paint Fill Tool, Fill Whole Selection with Black or White: Paint Tool Save this as Pattern file .pat!

2. Open your photograph in GIMP – Duplicate your image if you’d like to do some Layer Masking later!